This book overviews cancer immunity from broad scientific fields, based on the concept that cancer is a sort of by-product of infection, inflammation, and host immune response. The innate and acquired arms of the immune system mainly participate in tumor immune surveillance, and their activation is critically modulated by the situation of the tumor microenvironment. Many types of immune cells join the formation of the microenvironment. In particular, macrophages and dendritic cells enter the tumor mass to be main players in the inflammatory milieu of tumors. After introducing these topics, the book discusses immunotherapy for cancer patients as an outgrowth of this concept of infection and inflammation.
With the contributions of leading scientists actively involved in the field of antitumor immunity study, this book encourages readers to understand the mechanism of general cancers based on inflammation and will facilitate prevention and the development of therapeutics for cancer.
Preface.- 1 Role of bone marrow-derived CCR1+ cells in colon cancer invasion and metastasis.-?2 PGE2-associated inflammation and gastrointestinal tumorigenesis.- 3?Regulation of tumor-associated myeloid cells by innate immune signaling.- 4 The role of PIKfyve in TLR-mediated inflammation and immune responses.- 5 Emerging roles of an innate immune regulator TAPE in the Toll-like receptor and RIG-I-like receptor pathways.- 6 Anchorage-dependent multicellular aggregate formation induces CD44 high cancer stem cell-like phenotypes in adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma cells.- 7?Tumor-associated molecular patterns: its implication in tumoricidal inflammation.- 8?Host factors involved in the propagation and pathogenesis of hepatitis C virus.-?9?HCV-induced inflammation: The role of cross-talk between HCV-infected hepatocytes and stellate cells.- 10?Development of immunotherapy for hepatocellular carcinoma.- 11?l÷